
Associated Press Fla. County Orders Manual Recount By Marcy Gordon WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) -- Palm Beach County
election officials awarded three dozen additional votes
to Al Gore following a mechanical recount and then
decided that all 425,000 votes cast last week should be
counted by hand.
George W. Bush retained his lead in Florida after
Saturday's machine recount showed Gore adding 36 votes
and Bush losing three. A hand count of four selected
precincts turned up enough errors in the election night
vote to prompt the Democratic majority on the county
election commission to order the hand recount in all 531
precincts.
The county is a Democratic stronghold and the
decision to order a recount was made over strenuous
Republican objections with prospects for an appeal. Palm
Beach County could be key in deciding whether Gore or
Bush captures Florida's 25 electoral votes and becomes
the next president.
''This clearly would affect the national vote,'' said
Carol Roberts, a county commissioner and a member of the
canvassing commission. The panel's vote was 2-1, with
the two Democrats on the board voting for the hand
recount. The third member, County Judge Charles Burton,
has not specified any party affiliation.
A lawyer for the Republican Party, Mark Wallace,
objected to a further manual recount. ''It has been
pandemonium today,'' he said. ''We vigorously lodge our
protest and plead with you not to put the county through
that.''
Burton wanted an advisory opinion from the secretary
of state before proceeding with a hand count. After the
vote, Burton said: ''I would like to be more fully
informed before this board makes such a serious decision
that affects the whole country.''
Burton later told reporters he would seek to block
the board's action. The board plans to meet again Monday
to discuss the next move.
Republicans still hope to block a hand recount. They
asked a federal judge on Saturday to prevent hand
counting, but the judge set a hearing for Monday to
consider the case.
On Sunday morning, Volusia County began a full hand
recount of its 184,018 ballots, with employees working
14-hour days for three days.
Further complicating the picture, election officials
in Polk County said that a rescan of 92 of 163 precincts
resulted in a gain of 104 votes for Bush and seven for
Gore. These are votes that had not been recorded in the
previous count and recount of ballots.
Election authorities stopped short of making the
figures official pending a meeting on Monday to certify
the totals and report those to the state.
Palm Beach County has been at the center of the
struggle over the presidential election. Some voters
complained that its so-called ''butterfly'' ballot was
so confusing it caused them to mistakenly cast votes for
Pat Buchanan instead of Gore.
The hand recount, however, was unlikely to affect
votes mistakenly cast for Buchanan because voters'
intentions cannot be determined in such a count. A state
judge issued an injunction Thursday in response to
lawsuits filed by voters claiming confusion over the
ballot design.
In the hand recount, 80 ballots were tossed out
because voters had punched holes for both Gore and
Buchanan. The hand recount involved four precincts --
one in Palm Beach Gardens, two in Boca Raton and one in
Delray Beach.
About 30,000 ballots have been rejected in Palm Beach
County overall because they had two or more holes
punched for president -- or computers didn't detect any
holes at all. Ballots with two votes also are rejected
in hand counts.
The county figures released Sunday further cut Bush's
lead over Gore in Florida. An unofficial Associated
Press canvass of the presidential vote in Florida showed
Bush now has a 288-vote lead.
On Friday, Secretary of State Katherine Harris said
Bush had 2,910,074 votes to Gore's 2,909,114, a
difference of 960, with one county still to be recounted
-- Palm Beach County where the AP showed a big gain for
Gore.
The totals from the AP canvass were Bush 2,910,195,
Gore 2,909,907. Those numbers reflect the latest figures
from Palm Beach County.
The state has been unable to include updated Palm
Beach County figures in its tally because a state judge
issued an injunction Thursday in response to lawsuits
filed by voters claiming confusion over the ballot
design.
Palm Beach County officials said their exhaustive
manual recount found numerous differences from the
machine count. Roberts said the errors point to
potentially 1,900 errors county wide -- more than the
existing statewide margin between Bush and Gore.
The new Palm Beach machine tabulation, the third in
this populous Democratic-leaning county, gave Gore
269,732, or an add of 36 votes, and Bush 152,951, or
minus three, in the county.
Copyright © 2000 Associated Press. All rights reserved.
November 12, 2000
